In the fourth episode of of CRO Better, RevPartners CEO Brendan Tolleson sits down with Liz Christo to discuss the unique approach of Stage 2 Capital in venture capital, focusing on founder support and the challenges of re-accelerating growth in a post-COVID landscape. T
They explore the importance of aligning team and investor expectations, the significance of metrics and accountability, and the role of AI in improving operations.
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Startups today aren’t playing by the same fundraising rules as just a few years ago. Investors now expect significantly more traction before they even consider writing a check. Companies that used to raise an A round at $500K or $1M in ARR now need closer to $1.5M–$2M just to get in the room.
This shift means founders must show early efficiency, clear product usage, and strong momentum right out of the gate, often with a much leaner team.
Founders who raised in 2021 are now living in a different reality. They were told to grow fast, then told to cut burn and extend runway, and now… they’re being asked to accelerate again. It’s a psychological yo-yo that leaves CEOs scrambling to figure out how to grow without breaking the bank.
This new era requires rethinking growth strategy, balancing ambition with burn and resetting expectations with your board.
Rather than relying on one rigid growth plan, high-performing teams build three: a baseline (Maintain), a realistic improvement (Stretch), and a breakout scenario (Upside). Each plan is tied to leading indicators, like pipeline volume or conversion rates, and teams “earn” their way into higher growth by hitting those early signals.
It’s a smarter, more flexible way to scale without burning cash on unproven bets. This model not only drives accountability but also helps boards and exec teams stay aligned on when and how to unlock spend.
Tracking everything means focusing on nothing. The best teams narrow their dashboards down to 3–5 core metrics, ones that actually drive the business forward. Each metric should have a clear owner and a defined role in weekly reviews.
When everyone knows which lever they’re responsible for and how it ladders up to growth, it eliminates ambiguity, reduces reactivity, and increases team-wide clarity and momentum.
Growth today doesn’t mean throwing bodies at problems. Instead of defaulting to “let’s hire,” teams are being pushed to ask: What if we didn’t? This mindset forces smarter decisions, sharper priorities, and leaner operations.
Whether it’s using AI to automate tasks or rethinking how existing resources are deployed, efficiency is the unlock, and it often starts with challenging assumptions about what you think you need to grow.